traffic-control

0.1.1 • Public • Published

traffic-control

🚦 Get a grip on staging

Concept

This adds a bar to the top of a website hosted on Netlify that uses the Github and Netlify APIs to visually communicate information about the staging environment and allow one-click production deploys. Here are some mockups of the concept:

When staging is far beyond production When staging is in sync with production When staging has diverged behind production When the user is unauthorized to view changes or deploy

Installation

You can grab the code from NPM:

$ npm i traffic-control -S

Or from NPM CDN:

<script src="//npmcdn.com/traffic-control@0.1.1/dist/traffic-control.min.js"></script>

Usage

The easiest way to get set up is by doing the following:

First, load Netlify's OAuth helpers before your closing </body> (traffic-control will load this automatically if not present, but doing this will make it much faster):

<script src="https://app.netlify.com/authentication.js"></script>

And then load this script:

<script src="//npmcdn.com/traffic-control@0.1.1/dist/traffic-control.min.js"></script>

Then, simply initiate the trafficControl function:

trafficControl({
  repo: 'username/repo', // required. default is undefined.
  productionBranch: 'master', // required. default is 'master'
  stagingBranch: 'develop' // required. default is 'develop'
})

A good place to put it is on your staging site via Netlify's script injection feature:

The final step is to configure Github OAuth for your Netlify site. You can do that by following the instructions here: https://www.netlify.com/docs/authentication-providers

Goals

Eventually, I want to get rid of the dependency on Netlify and have this be its own Github integration. Keep eyes peeled!

Custom CSS

traffic-control's default styles are designed to have as little footprint as possible.

Using CSS, you can customize just about any element - simply use the ID #traffic-control as a namespace before every element.

#traffic-control .tc-bar { /* custom styles */ }

You can target specific states like so:

#traffic-control.is-mounted {}
#traffic-control.is-diverged {}
#traffic-control.is-ahead {}
#traffic-control.is-unauthorized {}
/* ...etc... */

Animations

traffic-control ships with a tiny keyframe-based animation engine.

If an element does not have an is-active class, it should be hidden from view.

When an element is about to be rendered, it will have an is-entering class. Similarly, when an element is about to be hidden, it will have an is-leaving class.

You can animate enter/leave states using CSS @keyframes:

#traffic-control .tc-bar.is-entering {
  animation: slideIn .6s ease;
}
 
@keyframes slideIn {
  from: {
    transform: translateY(100%);
  }
  to: {
    transform: translateY(0%);
  }
}

Animations are intelligent enough to detect the animationend event before triggering any new logic.

Note: animations are mandatory. Things will break if each element is not animated. This behavior is intentional and required to keep uniform behavior.

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Install

npm i traffic-control

Weekly Downloads

0

Version

0.1.1

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • declandewet